The Gazette 1974

THE INCORPORATED

Vol. 68

LAW SOCI ETY OF IRELAND

J ANUARY / F E BRUARY 1974

No.

THE GAZETTE OF THE I NCOR PORAT ED

J ANUAR Y / F E B RUARY 1974.

Vol.68 Nol/2.

L AW SOC I ETY OF I R E LAND

Contents

PRESIDENT e t e r D. M. Prentice Vfe® Presidents r'Hliam Anthony Osborne Uce St. John Blake, B.A., LL.B., ^rector-General; Ja ™es J. Ivers, M.Econ.Sc., M.B.A. Assistant Secretaries p a r V n p - Healy, B. Comm. (N.U.I.)

Editorials: Legal Aid—Land Development Ordinary General Meeting

2

Proceedings of the Council

8

The President and Vice-Presidents

9

Committess of the Council, 1974

10

p «nck Cafferky, B.C.L., L.L.B. Librarian & Editor of Gazette l u m Gavan Duffy, M.A., LL.B. (N.U.I.) Consultant; t r i c A. Plunkett, B.A. (N.U.I.) Office Hours E W a y „ t o Frida X' 9 a m.—I; 2.15—5.30 p.m. p ubhc, 9.30—I; 2.30—4.30 Library Hours 7 a -m. to 1.45 p.m.; 2.30 to 5.30 p.m. telephone 784533 Advertising co*. E it itor welcomes articles, letters and other °ntributions for publication in the Gazette. ^Pinions and comments in contributed articles na reviews are not published as the views of Llk o u n c " unle$s expressly so described. a r ^ i s e the opinions expressed in the Editorial r ® t h o s e of the Editor and do not necessarily «Present the views of the Council. ^ e Gazette is published during the first week * each month; material for publication should b e in the Editor's hands before the 10th of the Previous month if It Is intended that it should a ppear in the following issue. Acceptance of .Material for publication is not a guarantee that 1 } will in fact be included in any partuicular issue Sln ce this must depend on the space available. £ av jd P. Luke (Tel. 975500) 01 Rathgar Road, Dublin 6

Presentation of Certificates

10

Professional Decision (Tiverton v. Wearwell)

12

Developments in European Community Law—Irish Reports

14

Werhahn v. Community Case

17

Solicitors and E EC—Wex f o rd Seminar

18

Unreported Irish Decisions

19

The Charities Act 1973 (Martin)

23

£2 Million Lost in Fund Fraud

24

Rights and Duties of Solicitors (P. C. Moore)

25

Aspects of Constitutional Reform—Part 3 (Gavan-Duffy)

32

Statutory Instruments

36

Statutes of the Oireachtas 1973

37

International Bar Association

38

How Privilege protects the President (Goodhart)

40

Legal Education in New Zealand (Lawson)

41

Correspondence

42

45

Book Reviews

Miscellaneous

46

Printed by Minster Leader Ltd.. Naas, Co. Kildare

47

The Register, Registration of Title, etc.

I EDITORIAL LEGAL AID

I 1973, but which has only just been published. Its main controversial proposal is to control the price of building land in the public interest. Local authorities would be given power to apply to the High Court to designate areas, in which, in its opinion, the lands would be used during the following ten years for the purposes (i) of p'roviding sites for houses on factories, and (ii) for ex' pansion and development. The Judge sitting with two assessors would determme; the price if no agreement could be reached. Com·' pensation would be limited to existing use value, pluS 25 %. Although this scheme is primarily aimed against I developers who have amassed fortunes, the amount appears rather low. Two dissentients to the majority report claim that there is no justification for this radical departure, on the ground that, even construmg the Constitution liberally, it would not be possible to offer an owner selling land less than its proper market value. They considered that such a compensation scheme would be hard to operate equitably, and might cau"e injustice. Whatever view is ultimately taken, any legislation proposed is certain to arouse controversy. " provincial delegates in accordance with bye-law 29 (a) of the Society and were returned unopposed. Ulster-John C. O'Carroll Munster-Dermot G. O'Donovan . A meeting of the scrutineers was held on Thursda1 22nd November, 1973 at 11 o'clock. The pool was con– ducted from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. and the scrutmy was subsequently held. The result of the ballot was as follows: 581 envelopes containing ballot papers were receIved from members. The valid poll was 569. The following candidates received the number of votes placed after their name and were elected: John Carrigan 420, Mrs. Moya Quinlan 416, Patnd Noonan 415, John Maher 395, Anthony Collins 392, Patrick C. Moore 389, William A. Osborne 388, ThomaJ V. O'Connor 386, Brendan A. McGrath 385, Joseph L Dundon 382, Robert McD. Taylor 375, Bruce St. J. Blake 375, Peter E. O'Connell 369, James W. O'DonO' van 367, Francis J. Lanigan 366, Ralph J. Walker 364,. Walter Beatty 358, Michael P. Houlihan 351, Gerald Hickey 351, William B. Allen 349, Peter D. M. Prentice 347, Laurence Cullen 347, James R. C. Green 345, John B. Jermyn 338, George A. Nolan 335, Gerard M. Doyle 333, David R. Pigot 323, Patrick McEntee 318, Patrick F. O'Donnell 303, Ernest J. Margestson 298.' The foregoing candidates were returned as ordinary members of the Council for the year 1973/1974. Th~ President declared the result of the ballot in accordance with the Scrutineer's Report. On the motion of Mtj Mr. John Maher seconded by Mr. P. C. Moorel the audited accounts and balance sheet for the yeal ended 30 April 1973 circulated with the Agenda we~ adopted. Leinster-Christopher Hogan Connaught-Patrick J. McEllin

I t is satisfactory to note that the Minister for Justice, Mr. Cooney, proposes to establish a Committee to advise him on the introduction of legal aid in civil cases. What is even more important is that this Committee will be fully representative of the Legal profession as a whole, includin~ jud~es, barristers, solicitors and a member of the Free Legal Advice Centre (FLAC). The Minister rightly praised the tremendous work which up to now, had been undertaken by FLAC, and expressed the hope that the Committee would evolve a scheme of Legal Aid, which would aid financially the free services here– tofore provided by FLAC. The 80 law students of this or~anisation, supported by 40 barristers and 60 solici– tors, would have been physically unable to carryon without financial assistance. Let us hope, that, pending the completion of the Report, this will be provided rapidly as an interim measure. LAND DEVELOPMENT The Committee under the chairmanship of Mr. Justice Kenny, issued sOllie radical proposals about land de– velopment, in the Report which it presented in March The notice convening the meeting and the minutes of the ordinary general meeting held in Killarney in May 1973 were read, and they were subsequently signed. Presentation to Mr. Plunkett The President then made a presentation to Mr. Eric Plunkett upon his retirement as Secretary of the Society. This consisted in a cheque from ali the members, as well as a magnificent parchment, which it is hoped to publish in the Gazette subsequently. Mr. Plunkett, in thanking the members for their munificent ~ift, referred to the fact that, while it was the duty of the Secretariat to co-operate, there were occasions when it had to be unpopular. Having referred to some personalities in the Society such as Geor~e Wakely and Arthur Cox, he was glad to leave the Society in such a prosperous state after 30 years. Miss Thelma King, President of the Dublin Solicitors' Bar Association, wished Mr. Plunkett many years of happiness in his retirement on behalf of the members of her Association. A meeting of the scrutineers appointed at the Ordinary General Meeting of the Society held on 12th May 1973 together with the ex-officio scrutineers was held on 23 October 1973 at 1 o'clock. Nominations for ordinary membership of the Council were received from 31 candidates all of which were declared valid and the scrutineers directed that their names be placed on the ballot paper. The following candidates were duly nominated as 2 BALLOT FOR THE COUNCIL 1973/74- REPORT OF THE SCRUTINEERS

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING The President (Mr. T. V. O'Connor) took the chair at 2.30 p.m. on Thursday, 29 November 1973.

On the motion of Mr. John Maher, seconded by Mr. Peter Prentice, Messrs. Cooper Brothers & Co. were

re-appointed as auditors to the Society.

President's Speech at Annual General Meeting, 29 November, 1973 Ladies and Gentlemen,

and the diversity of legal business the Solicitor relies to a greater extent on members of the Bar, for advice

You have received the report of the Council for the year ended 30 September, last, which covers part of the term of office of my predecessor, Mr. James O'Donovan, and most of my period of office now drawing to a close. In two respects perhaps these periods have made minor contributions to the long history of the Incor- porated Law Society. James O'Donovan was the first President from Cork City—in itself perhaps some- thing of a miracle when we think of the importance of Cork and the part it has taken in the national and legal affairs of the Country—while I am the first Presi- dent from County Mayo, I feel as gratified by the honour which you have conferred on me as I am sure James O'Donovan and his colleagues felt when you elected him as the first President from the second metropolis of the Republic. I am and always will be most grateful to my professional colleagues for having conferred on me the greatest honour in their giving. Changes in Legal Practice As I have said, you have received and no doubt diligently read the report of the Society's work during me year recently ended. I need not, therefore, go through it in detail, although it does contain some matters which call for comment. In my address at the last general meeting in Killarney I said that the pro- tession stands at a watershed. Events will not stand still. The work of the practitioner changes from year to year with legal and economic developments affecting n ot only ourselves but the whole community. The de- mand for legal services increases with the increase of he level of general education; the prosperity of the people which raises both the standard and the cost of iving and the complexity and kaleidoscopic changes in our legal system. The ordinary citizen is unable to cope with these changes and looks in the first instance to the oiicitor as his general professional advisor to help him m his difficulties. The nature of legal service has anged beyond recognition during the period which o f S u P sec * ^nce the professional lifetime of the fathers the older members now listening to me and indeed / ^ m s tbe professional lives of many of us. In the past Solicitor tended to become identified with the pro- P r ty -owning-classes many of them owners of large anded estates tied up in settlement to keep the pro- P eit .y intact and in the family. In the country districts, , riI lS the period of land agitation he was probably e Solicitor for either the landed proprietor or the nant, and many a legal reputation, including if I ay revert for a moment to legal history, the legal m e of Sir, then Mr. Edward Carson was made by re presenting the tenants in the Courts established under the Land Act 1881. Today the profession has a r wider clientele drawn from all ranks of the com- munity. The motor car, the reforms of the law, relating landlord and tenant, planning legislation, tax law, nou Slng iegi s i at i on and the spread of private owner- both of agricultural and urban property have all ^ontributed to these changes. The Solicitor is required kn a J ° ne to b e a Lawyer but to have at least a general p l e d g e of business legislation and affairs unknown his forefathers. The business element tends to pre- minate because in the pressures of running an office

on matters of pure law. The Role of the Society

The Law Society must to an ever increasing extent, participate in these changing conditions and aid its members in adjusting themselves to the changes al- ready upon us and those which are to come. We are a profession governed largely by statute and statutory regulations. Unlike the Hon. Society of King's Inns and the professions of architecture, medicine, and en- gineering, we are not completely autonomous. We have a measure of autonomy in certain fields in that the Solicitors' Act 1954-1960, which are the Statutory basis of our profession confer a fairly wide regulation- making power on the Council. The Council is the governing body of the profession elected by ballot of the members now approaching 1,500 numerically. In my view the duty of a governing body is to govern in the interests of the profession, not any sections of it and of course with regard to the interests of the administra- tion of Justice and the public. The Council represents fairly, the various sections of the profession both city and country, and there is in fact, a slight numerical preponderance of country over city members. I have sometimes heard it said by a few members, who have not troubled to inform themselves of the facts, that the profession is governed from Dublin. This is true per- haps in the geographical sense that the Council meets in Dublin once in each month. I can assure you that at these meetings the views of country practitioners are amply expressed and represented and may I take this opportunity of paying a tribute to the regularity with which country members, some of whom travel considerable distances, attend meetings of the Council and of the various committees which you will find in the report. The Societys' Functions What are the main functions and work of our Society? It is unique among professional organisations in that it has an amalgamation of duties partly under its Charters and partly under Statute, to represent and forward the professional interests of Solicitors in the daily conduct of practice, which may broadly, if some- what inaccurately, call trade union functions, and at the same time to protect the interests of the public in their relations as clients of Solicitors which may be described as regularity or disciplinary functions. Furthermore, it regulates admission to apprenticeship, the education and training of apprentices and their examinations be- fore admission to practice. It keeps the Roll of Solicitors, issues annual practicing certificates, receives and checks annual Accountants' certificates lodged by Solicitors, and administers the Compensation Fund. Services to Members The Society promotes a fairly wide range of services to members and indirectly to their clients. The Com- pany Formation Service is now running at the rate of about 1,000 new private companies each year. The ser- vice is conducted by professionally qualified personnel on the Society's staff who deal not with the client direct but with the Solicitor-member. I think it is 3

important to state that the overall responsibility for advising the client, both as to the advisability of in- corporation at all and the type of company to be formed rests on the private practitioner. Th at is what he is retained for and that is what he is paid for. This Society assists by supplying standard printed forms of memorandum and articles, clearance and communi- cation with the Companies' Offices, supplying draft precedents of principal objects clauses and attending generally to the routine mechanical details. The service has been extensively used by members and while we receive a small quota of complaints about delay I think this is inevitable in any large-scale operation and we can generally remedy the situation fairly quickly. We have to deal not only with the Companies' offices but with printers, seal-engravers and other suppliers. Last July, Mr. Plunkett and I and a delegate from the profession met here in Dublin representatives of the Revenue Commissioners following which the Estate Duty Office agreed to assist a system whereby assess- ments of Estate Duty (including cases in which the assets include private 'limited companies) will be made immediately on the facts appearing from the Inland Revenue Affidavit subject to a number of safeguards including the acceptance by Solicitors availing of the concession of personal responsibility for complying with requirements as to corrective affidavits, transfer of stock tendered in payment of death duties and other matters and an undertaking by the Society to en- force by appropriate action observance of such under- takings in case of default. Members were notified of the concession and of the conditions attaching to it by circular in August 1973. The successful operation of the system and its continuance depends upon' co- operation from members and the Council strongly re- commend it to the profession. Regulation of the Profession It is right to point out that the regularity and dis- ciplinary functions of the Society are necessary in the interests both of the public and of the profession itself; necessary because we enjoy an exclusive privilege by statute in certain fields of practice, and every right implies a corresponding obligation. A citizen who wants to make or take a lease, sell or purchase pro- perty or have a legal document drafted, or institute proceedings in the Court, must in the first instance retain a Solicitor. He may have his Will drawn, if he wishes, by himself or by the local school master, but this practice is usually followed by disaster. An eminent English judge, Lord St. Leonards, drew up his own Will. Litigation after his death occupied the English Courts and Lawyers for a decade. I doubt if the intention of that noble lord was simply to create work for his brethren at the Bar! Furthermore, this profession is entrusted annually with many millions of pounds of Clients' money. This is necessary for the conduct of the business affairs of the community because many conveyances and other transactions conducted between strangers, who have no knowledge of their mutual financial standing and indeed integrity, depend on undertakings exchanged between their respective Solicitors. Solicitors earn their living largely by handling other people's money. It is therefore in the public interest, and indeed essential, that there should exist a body such as the Law Society equipped with the necessary statutory powers to ensure that the duties arising from this privileged position will be faithfully and honestly performed and that any person who

suffers through defalcation or dishonesty of a member of our professions will be protected. I say that the existence of these powers is for the benefit of our profession for this reason. The Common Law countries by which I mean Ireland, England, India, Australia, the U.S.A. and Canada are the countries in which the legal profession enjoys the greatest degree of freedom from State control. In these countries, the profession is largely selfgoverning in that it retains control over admission, education, the right to practice and the disciplinary power either directly as in England, or through the Disciplinary Committee and the. High Court as here. In many European coun- tries, to go no further, the legal profession is largely under state control, through a Department of Justice or some other arm of Government. If our Society were to fail in the exercise of the regulatory and disciplinary power, while seeking to retain its exclusive professional privileges, which I firmly believe are for the protection of the public, there would inevitably be a public de- mand for a substitute followed by State intervention. Professional Independence and the Public For the preservation of the liberty of the citizen and the rule of Law it is essential that the legal pro- fession should, above all, preserve its independence. From this it follows that the profession should have the right to regulate its own affairs, have adequate economic resources to enable it to act fearlessly, and that it should not have to perform its duties in pre- serving the rights of its clients under conditions cal- culated to make it subservient to external pressure. If the independence of the profession, in either of its branches, were ever significantly curtailed, the freedom of every citizen would be curtailed with it. Professional Status The terms "profession" and "professional" have acquired different meanings in different contexts. The word profess can mean pretend in the sense of making an insincere profession of friendship. It can mean teach in the sense of lecturers and professors in Schools, Universities, and learned Societies. In the Churches it is used in the context of taking religious vows. In sport professionalism is the counterpart of the amateur status and was formerly used in a disparaging sense, as it was thought that the Status of a person who carried on an activity without reward was superior to that of the man who made his living from his occupation. The advocate in the time of Cicero was an amateur in this sense, and the Barrister at the present day still, in theory, preserves his amateur Status, having no legal right or remedy to recover fees not paid with the brief or instructions. He relies on the discretion and integrity, of the Solicitor by whom he is instructed. In the sense in which it is used today as applying to the legal and other recognised professions it is defined in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary as an occupation in which one professes to be skilled in and to follow; a vocation in which a professed knowledge of some department of learning is used in its application to the affairs of others or in the practise of an art founded upon it applied particularly to the three learned professions of divinity.- law, and medicine and later to the military profession. In the wider sense, it is used as descriptive of any calling or occupation by which a person habitually earns his living. A profession came to be regarded as the title of a body of persons engaged in such a calling. It is a recognisable characteristic of a learned pro- fession of which ours is one of the most ancient. Ad- 4

to nr.me only a few vocations, fix their own fees to mset the exigencies of the moment. On top of this complex system of fixing Solicitors' fees, the Govern- ment in the latest Prices Act has provided that no Order made by any of the committees which I have referred to shall be effective, if it proposes to increase fees, unless sanctioned by the Minister for Industry and Commerce. His functions may in turn be dele- gated to any other Minister—probably, in the case of our profession, to the Minister for Justice. The Council have had discussions with the Minister for Justice and his officials about the methods of fixing Solicitors' fees as far back as 1969 when their repre- sentatives were then received by Mr. O'Morain, the last predecessor but one of the present Ministers. The Society's representatives pointed out the time-wasting and complex systems of dealing with applications for increases under the present system. No fair-minded person can maintain that in a climate of continuing inflation of prices—now in the region of 10% per annum—Solicitors' charges should be subject to a stand- still order while all other costs and fees, including the overhead expenses of running offices, of which salaries and wages are a major factor, rise with the annual wage rounds or national wage agreements. Other professions, Medicine, Accountancy, Consulting En- gineers, Motor Asse~sors, Surveyors, and others with whom our profession is in constant contact and on which it depends for consultancy and co-operation adjust their fees to meet the circumstances of the day. It is the experience of the Council that Solicitors' charges for Court business and non-contentious busi- ness under Schedule 2 are dealt with only after arduous preparations, prolonged consideration and, where Ministerial consent is necessary, long delay. The Coun- cil have not made any application for an increase in the mortgages since the present scales were fixed in 1947 taking this view that where a charge is calculated as a commission on the value of the property passing the increase in the value of the property provides an auto- matic increase in the fees received. However, in the case of Solicitors' fees this is qualified by the over-riding consideration that the commission scale, unlike that of many other professions and occupations is regressive, falling steeply to a maximum of 19% and as low as 0.35p per £100 of value on the part of the considera- tion increasing more than £10,000. Other professions I need not go into detail, charge a flat commission scale which does not decline with the value of the property. As property values increase and with the increase, the responsibility and risk of the Solicitor, the average rate of his remuneration falls. One should also have regard to the fact that the continual changes in our legal system, which is apparent from the volume of legisla- tion with which the profession has to deal, impose great demands on Solicitors' time, and with it the work involved in attending to clients' affairs and the ex- penses of running a Solicitor's practice. The Council therefore, proposed to the then Minister for Justice, Mr. O'Morain that a Central Costs Com- mittee should be set up which would include members of the Judiciary, representatives of the profession, and experts such as Chartered Accountants which would be empowered to renew Solicitors' fees and expenses at frequent intervals having regard to the current index of prices and other relevant factors. It was suggested that such a high-powered com- mittee should have executive and not merely advisory powers and the Society for the first time in history of 5

mission to a profession is invariably dependent on a minimum standard of general education. This must be followed by a prescribed period of professional educa- tion and training laid down either by Statute or by the rules of the professional body to which the Student submits. In order to conform, a university degree is in many cases a necessary condition of admission to the profession. Admission also depends on passing pre- scribed examinations and tests. Members admitted to the profession are identifiable from a roll or register. Lastly, in all professions worthy of the name, there are recognised standards of conduct and ethics designed to ensure that professional service will be maintained at a proper recognised standard, and that the interests of the client will take precedence over the material in- terests of the practitioner. It is a recognised mark of a profession that where there is any likelihood of a con- flict of interest between the practitioner and the client, the professional relationship must be terminated. Criticism of the Profes:ion If my preceding remarks seem to some of you to resemble the annual statement made in addressing students about to enter our profession, rather than a body of mature practitioners to whom these principles a re already familiar, it is not without reason. Anyone w h o reads the daily press and periodicals and indeed the work of more serious authors must be aware of the growing attitude of criticism towards all professions including our own. In one sense it is natural that pro- fessional men should not be popular or at least that they should be expected to justify their existence as a Privileged elite. George Bernard Shaw was only the successor of Dickens and other popular writers when he described the professions as a conspiracy against the Public. Shaw's particular "bete noire" was the medical profession. Possibly the fact that he was a vegetarian was symptomatic of this attitude! This attitude of critical scrutiny of professional status and practice has been shown in this country by the Restrictive Practices Act 1972 which for the first time brought professional services within the scope of the Fair Trades Commission and subject to the same examination as the practices of trade and industry in the field of monopoly and what are regarded as restric- tive practices. We must be prepared to meet this chal- tenge whenever it comes. Representatives of the Council were received by the Minister and officials of the De- partment of Industry and Commerce when the legisla- tion was being drafted. It was clearly stated for the yepartment that the fact that a professional practice is restrictive does not necessarily mean that it is unfair. e hope to show that the long standing practices of o u r profession, some sanctioned by statute or statutory re Sulation, others by long-standing usage and opinions °f the Council, and often confirmed by Judicial e cisions of the Courts, are necessary to preserve pro- essional standards and the interests of our clients. So Jicitors 'Fees Central Costs Committee I he Prices (Amendment) Act 1972 introduces an entirely new concept into the existing systems of regulat- Solicitors' fees. As far as I know our profession ares with taxi-cab drivers the distinction of being the oiy occupations whose charges are not self-controlled, r e a r e in the rather invidious position of having our . e cs controlled by five or six different committees acting uependently without any communication or means of , 1 g a t i ng the economics of professional practice as a ft °le. Accountants, Auctioneers, Medical practitioners,

economic conditions. Such agreements and gross sum bills are authorised by the Solicitors' Remuneration General Orders. Solicitors and the E.E.C. A Standing Committee of the Council has been set up to help practitioners who find themselves confronted with legal problems involving the law of the Com- munity advising clients with business transactions with European connotations. Meetings have been held with representatives of the University Law faculties, the National Library and the Departments of Foreign Affairs and Justice. At present, the immediate prob- lems fall under two main heads : first , the establish- ment of an information service for members allied with a central depositary library in Dublin for all E.E.C. legal material, and second the effect on Irish practi- tioners of the proposed directives removing the restric- tions on freedom of movement and practice by Lawyers in the Member-States. The first of the problems which I have mentioned is ultimately financial. Very large sums of money will be required to equip a depository library with the vast amount of legal documents and text books coming from and concerning the E.E.C. A working party has been set up to explore and report back to the main committee. The financial difficulties are so formidable that without Government assistance they may well be insuperable. The Committee has been in constant liaison with the representatives of the De- partment who deal with negotiations in Brussels on the directives of freedom of movement. I do not propose to enlarge further on this subject at present as it could in itself form the whole subject of my address, beyond indicating that it engages the constant attention of the Council. Legal Education Here again I touch on a vast subject and I must refer you to the current and previous reports of the Council and the Gazette for detailed information. It also formed a major part of my address at the ordinary General Meeting last May in Killarney. I, therefore, do not propose to enlarge on it except to say that in July representatives of the Council were received by the ne\v Minister for Justice. They supplied him with a dossier of the Society's proposals from 1961 to the present date. He expressed agreement in principle with them and suggested that we should enter into discussions with the Universities and then resubmit the matter to him- I am informed that it took 12 years negotiation with the Department of Justice to achieve the passing of the Solicitors' Act 1954. If the present negotiations about education take the same time we may expect to have them in operation in 1981. I hope I am not being cynical and I do not intend to be. The Minister has expressed goodwill and you may rest assured that the Society for its part will leave nothing undone to bring about the reform of our educational system which everybody concerned agrees is in the public interest. Retirement of Mr. Plunkett A most important event in the history of the Society has taken place during my year of office. I refer to the retirement from the post of Secretary of Mr. Eric Plun- kett which post he had filled with such remarkable distinction since the year 1942. His retirement rathe* saddens us Solicitors and indeed all who had the pleasure and privilege of knowing him. Mr. Plunkett was at all times an inspiration and a shining example of all that is good and worth while in our profession- On behalf of the Law Society and all its members I 6

any profession were agreeable, on these conditions, that public representatives of the necessary authority and calibre should be included on the committee. The Minister at the time appeared to be sympathetic to- wards the Society's proposals. Unfortunately since then events have taken a different course. There is no Central Costs Committee; applications for increases in fees must still be made to five or six committees, acting independently; reviews of fees after authorisation by the appropriate committee in some cases must await concurrance of the Minister for Justice, and a further barrier has now been created in the requirement in prices legislation of the consent of the Minister for Industry and Commerce, generally after consulting the National Prices Advisory Com- mittee. The tribunal set up under the recent Prices (Amendment) Act is not the type of Central Costs Committee envisaged in the Society's representations to the Minister for Justice. It includes no representa- tion from the Judiciary or the professional experts such as Accountants who from their daily practice are familiar with Solicitors' earnings and the conditions under which they work. One of the main tasks of the incoming Council will be to approach the Minister for Justice with proposals for a speedy system of reviewing applications in relation to Solicitors' fee at regular intervals to keep pace with inflation and to review the whole field of fees in the light of the principles of cross subsidisation. There are some fields of practice which could not be accepted or continued unless sub- sidised by earning, from probate, conveyances and other In the "typescript" of my notes the word "new" appears in inverted commas. Originally all Solicitors fees had to be set out in a document resembling a surveyors bill of quantities, each item such as letters, attendances, and copying being priced in a prescribed scale. This is still the position in theory if not in prac- tice. A patient who would pay his Medical Practitioner or Dentist a fee of 100 Guineas on a sheet of pro- fessional stationery with the specification "Professional Services rendered" might request his Solicitor to furnish a bill of costs running to 30 or 40 pages. The cost of preparing such bills is exorbitant, apart from the delay involved and sometimes the impossibility of having such bills prepared. One argument for the commission scale fee on sales and purchases is that it is simple, acceptable to the public and avoids the delay and expense of de- tailed bills. A new and simplified Schedule 2 system was introduced in England in 1953 and in Northern Ire- land within the past two years. A bill of fees in a non- contentious matter is now one item being a discre- tionary fee calculated in accordance with seven specific factors described in the Order. The considerations are the skill, time necessarily involved in the transaction, the number of documents read and examined, the amount of any property involved, the responsibility of the Solicitor and all other relevant circumstances of the case. In England and Northern Ireland the client re- viewing such a bill is entitled to ask for a certificate of reasonableness from the Law Society. In my opinion, the time has arrived for the adoption of a similar system in the Republic for all non-contentious work not included in the commission fees. Pending the introduction of such a system my advice to members is that agreements on reasonable fees should be made with clients, and gross sum bills should be delivered bearing a proper relation to the current financial and non-contentious work. The "New" Schedule 2

that be to see about having the State pay in cash whenever they take over lands and we all know the vast powers they enjoy in acquiring properties com- pulsorily. I cannot close this address without offering thanks and to so many. First of all as I have already said I thank the Society for electing me as President and I shall always cherish and value more than I can say the fact that I have occupied the Chair of my own Pro- fession thereby following in the steps of so many illustrious Irishmen of the past. In a special way I thank my two Vice-Presidents, Mr. Peter Prentice and Mr. P. C. Moore for their help and kindness all through my year of office. Indeed without them I do not know what I would have done. They "stood in" for me many times—they are great members of a good profession and I will be pardoned (I hope) if I say openly what I often said to myself, especially during the Office Reorganisation that took place this year, "Thank God for Peter". Mr. Martin Healy did such wonderful work in really running the Killarney meeting and functions that he deserves special mention. Th at the Killarney weekend was such a success last May was due very largely to Martin Healy and his wife, Collette. The adoption of the Report was proposed by Mr. Gerard Doyle and seconded by Mr. John Nash. A discussion followed in which the following matters were raised : Full disclosure of assets in balance sheet —Mr. Quen- tin Crivon objected that this had not been done and Mr. Prentice assured him this would be done in future. Four Courts Hotel —It was suggested that this could be taken over as additional accommodation for the Society, but Mr. Prentice explained the difficulties in- volved. The King's Hospital —Mrs. Virginia Doyle-Rochford asked what was happening to this building, and criticised the Council for not giving more information. Mr. P. G. Moore, replying, stated that the King's Hospital was a most valuable asset, and that there were great educational opportunities in the premises. Mr. Golm Price stated that members should be given an opportunity of discussing the matter, and that members should be circularised about the developments occurr- ing. Mr. Crivon suggested that the Council should submit a Report to the members at the next Ordinary General Meeting. Mr. Prentice, replying stated that the original estimate to effect repairs to make the place habitable was £450,000. Even as it was, the premises were now worth £50,000 more than when they had bought it. New assistant solicitors —Mr. Grivon expressed alarm at the fact that~the average newly qualified solicitor had no practical experience though expecting a high salary, and the President promised that this matter would be looked into. The President replied to the various points raised. The motion for the adoption of the Report was put to the meeting and carried unanimously. Thursday, 28 November 1974 was appointed as the date of the next Annual General Meeting. Mr. T. D. McLoughlin then moved that the Senior Vice-President take the chair. Mr. Peter Prentice took the chair and Mr. T. D. McLoughlin proposed a vote of thanks to the President for his distinguished services to the Society during his year of office. Mr. Prentice, Vice-President, associated himself with the motion, which was then put to the meeting, and carried un- animously. The meeting then terminated.

thank most sincerely and most profoundly Mr. Plunkett for his wonderful services to all of us and indeed to this country as a whole. He was known and beloved internationally and in my trips abroad during the past year to hear so many distinguished people speak with such esteem and indeed affection of Eric. We will all be in his debt forever. Happily, he continues in the capacity of part-time consultant. I wish him and Mrs. Plunkett many years of happy retirement. The Society has been lucky to obtain Mr. James J. Ivers to succeed him, who is now Director-General, Secretary, and Re- gistrar in this Society. He has had a wonderful record in the national and other services and though his is as yet only a short time with us he has already dispalyed such remakarble ability, industry, kindness and con- sideration that I have not the slightest doubt but that under Mr. Ivers' Direction, our Profession will progress a nd achieve a place and a greatness that it deserves. }Ve wish him every possible success and co-operation J n what is by no means an easy job. I am hoping that in the not too far distant future Important Judges and Officials of the E.E.C. will be invited to Ireland and that our Society will provide f°r them all that is desirable in the way of entertain- ment and welcome. I have had many kind and helpful things done me by a U of the Society's Staff and I am most grateful to them. Permit me to mention particularly (though by no means exclusively) Mr. Patrick Cafferkey who since bis appointment during the year as an Assistant Secre- tory has done his work most thoroughly, Mr. Colum Gavan-Duffy the Librarian, Miss Patricia McNama ra ^lso Miss Rosemary Dunne, Mr. and Mrs. Willie G'Reilly and Mr. Jack Fitzpatrick. I thank them and a ll who did so much to make my year of office the success I trust it has been. I refer with deep regret to the following members w h o have died since this time last year and in each c a s e I offer deep sympathy to their relatives : John R. Lawson, Dublin; Henry V. Lynam, Dublin; fnomas M .A. Lynch, Ennis; Peter J .Flynn, Dublin; Mrs. Dorothea M. O'Reilly, Dublin; Thomas Reilly, Glonmel; Patrick T. J. Mulligan, Ballina; William McFerran, Dublin; John J. Hannan, Dublin; Francis J- Gannon, Mohill; Thomas E. O'Donnell, Limerick; John F. Goold, Macroom. In conclusion I am indebted to my colleagues on the Council many of whom represented me, often at short n °tice, at gatherings which I could not attend per- ^nally, and in a special way my thanks are due to the ast Presidents on the Council whose advice was a 'ways forthcoming and in this regard I owe particular r y ^ 1 t o m y friend and immediate predecessor, James O Donovan, whom I could almost call my "Mentor" a u through the year. Pa yment in Land Bonds t should like to take this opportunity of referring ? a grievance of both the public and solicitors and bat is the practice of paying for land taken by the • a n ( I Commission in Land Bonds. This to my mind ls c °ntrary to natural justice. Surely if we are to pre- serve the right of private property in Ireland the a t e should give a lead and pay in cash for any lands , R e q u i r e . I have seen people being deprived of their oldings of land and on realising the Land Bonds \ a slow process usually) receive only three-fourths of e purchase money which is a situation that is in- f e r a b le in any civilized community. I trust those le f remarks of mine will perhaps influence the powers

THE SOCIETY Proceedings of the Council MEETING HELD 27th NOVEMBER 1973

13th DECEMBER 1973 Mr. T. V. O'Connor and afterwards Mr. Peter D. M. Prentice in the Chair, also present: Messrs W. B. Allen, Walter Beatty, Bruce St. J. Blake, John F. Buckley, John Carrigan, Anthony E. Collins, Laurence Cullen, Gerard M. Doyle, Joseph L. Dundon, Felicity Foley, James R. C. Green, Gerald Hickey, Michael P. Houlihan, Nicholas S. Hughes, Thomas Jackson, Jnr., John B. Jermyn, Francis J. Lanigan, John Maher, Ernest J. Margetson, Gerald J. Moloney, Patrick C. Moore, Patrick J. McEllin, Patrick McEntee, Brendan A. McGrath, John J. Nash, Patrick Noonan, John C. O'Carroll, Peter E. O'Connell, Patrick F. O'Donnell, Dermot G. O'Donovan, James W. O'Donovan, Rory O'Connor, William A. Osborne, Moya Quinlan, Robert McD. Taylor, and Ralph J. Walker. Election of President and Vice-Presidents Mr. Peter D. M. Prentice was elected President and took the Chair at the meeting. Mr. William A. Osborne was elected Senior Vice-President and Mr. Bruce St. J. Blake was elected Junior Vice-President. International Union of Latin Notaries It was decided on a motion that the Incorporated Law Society of Ireland should become a corresponding member of the Common Market Section of the Inter- national Union of Latin Notaries. Retainer in Criminal Cases Members wrote stating that they represented an accused person in criminal proceedings in the District Court. The accused was convicted and without taking advice or without having his solicitors take any steps lodged a notice of appeal in hri own name. Members wanted to know whether a solicitor taking a District Court criminal case must follow same through t othe Circuit Court irrespective of whether their fees are paid or not. The Council felt that in the circumstances out- lined the solicitor was not necessarily bound to appear on the appeal. Mortgagee's Solicitor's costs in cases of equitable mort- gages by deposit Members wrote to the Society stating they acted for clients who were borrowing from a bank sums up to £10,000 maximum to be secured by equitable mortgage of deposit of title deeds and they wanted to know hwa t' was the correct basis for charging. The Council on a report of a committee decided to inform members as follows: (1) The question of costs is primarily a legal ques- tion. (2) An equitable deposit of title documents can secure either (a) a specific sum borrowed or (b) any future sums being borrowed up to a maximum figure agreed either verbally or in writing between the parties. (3) It seems that a solicitor can charge the scale fee under Schedule 1 where the transaction involves 8

The President in the Chair, also present: Messrs. W. B. Allen, Walter Beatty, Bruce St. J. Blake, John F. Buckley, John Carrigan, Anthony Collins, Laurence Cullen, Gerard M. Doyle, Joseph L. Dundon, James R. C. Green, Gerald Hickey, Christopher Hogan, Michael P. Houlihan, Nicholas S. Hughes, John B. Jermyn, Francis J. Lanigan, John Maher, Ernest J. Margetson, Patrick C. Moore, Patrick J. McEUin, Patrick McEntee, Brendan A. McGrath, John J. Nash, Peter E. O'Connell, Patrick F. O'Donnell, Dermot G. O'Donovan, James W. O'Donovan, Rory O'Connor, William A. Osborne, David R. Pigot, Peter D. M. Prentice, Moya Quinlan and Ralph J. Walker. Election of Council There were 31 candidates for the 31 places available for ordinary members of the Council and the following members received the votes as recorded in the Scru- tineer's Ballot, page 2. In effect the Council was the same as last year except that Messrs P. F. O'Donnell and E. J. Mar- getson replaced Messrs Eunan McCarron and Thomas J. Fitzpatrick. The extraordinary members of the Council for the year 1973/'74 elected were as follows: From the Dublin Solicitors' Bar Association, Rory O'Connor, John F. Buckley and Thomas Jackson, Jnr. From the Southern Law Association, Bryan Russell, Gerald J. Moloney, Nicholas S. Hughes, Mrs. Felicity Foley and John A. O'Meara. The following candidates were duly nominated as provincial delegates in accordance with bye-law 29 (a) of the Society and were returned unopposed. Ulster : John C. O'CarroU Munstcr : Dermot G. O'Donovan Leinster : Christopher Hogan Connaugh t: Patrick J. McEllin Subjects for Preliminary Examination The Council decided on a motion that Rule 10 of the Apprenticeship and Education Regulations made under the Solicitors' Act 1954 should be amended by the deletion of the existing Rule and the substitution therefor of the following : Subjects at the preliminary examination. The subjects at the Preliminary Examination shall be as follows : (a) English and Mathematics. (b) One of the following subjects that is to say Latin, French or German. (c) Any two of the following subjects, History, Geo- graphy, Greek, Latin, French or German (if not taken as a compulsory subject under (b) above, a modern language (other than Irish) approved by the Court of Examiners, Physics, Chemistry, Bio- logy» Commerce (which is composed of four sec- tions namely, Economics, Business Organisation, Accountancy and Economic History of which the candidate will take one section only).

the passing of certain specified sums of money. Of course there would have to be a full perusal and in- vestigation of title and of other work contemplated by the schedule. The schedule mentions that the trans- action must be "completed". It is clear from the authority of re/Baker, 1912 2, Chancery 405 that an equitable deposit is completed merely by the handing over of title documents. (4) In cases where the equitable deposit is in return for an advance of sums uncertain in the future, it is quite clear that schedule 2 charges must be the basis of the bill of costs. The authority for this is Barton's case (1899), Irish Reports, page 515. The basic reason- l n g here seems to be that it would be unfair to the solici- tor to curtail his charges to amounts actually passing either at the time of the transaction or immediately following thereto. Likewise itwould be unfair to the Parties for the solicitor to charge on the maximum figure allowed should it transpire that no money subse- quently passes hands. In short the entire transaction would be too uncertain for anything other than Sche- dule 2 charges to operate. District Justices acting in criminal and civil side of motor accident cases Members wrote to the Society stating that with the advent of the new jurisdiction in the District Court on fhe civil side there arises a problem which is becoming increasingly common. Certain District Justices who nave already heard cases on the Criminal side such as Prosecutions for dangerous driving are later presented with the civil claim and are expected to adjudicate thereon. Members felt that it was not correct for a District Justice to hear a civil claim having disposed the Criminal hearing. The Council felt that the practice of District Justices to hear both criminal Prosecutions and civil claims arising out of the same circumstances was undesirable. Society's conditions of sale In view of the Auctioneers' and House Agents Act 1973 which provides that auctioneers' fees cannot be passed on to the purchaser, the Society's conditions of sale were considered by the Council and it was decided that the same should be altered only by the deletion of reference to auction fees. Society's requisitions on title The Council decided to publish a letter received from Patrick Noonan, Solicitor, Athboy, concerning the ^ociety's requisitions on title and to invite comment Irom practitioners concerning the Society's standard re quisitions. (See page 41.) Delay in the Valuation Office . Members wrote complaining of delay in the Valua- tion Office. The Council decided that member's letter should be published in the correspondence section of he Gazette and the comments of practitioners sought, l^ee page 42.) Consideration of the Twelfth Interim Report of the Committee on Court Practice and Procedure Short details of this report was published in the iNoyember issue of the Society's Gazette page 225. The ociety has asked Bar Associations for their comments, his matter is to be considered by the Council a ttheir ebruary meeting and Secretaries of Bar Associations or an V other practitioners who wish to make a submission the Society concerning this report should write ^me d i a t e ly to the Director General of the Society.

The President and Vice-Presidents

Mr. Peter D. M. Prentice, Senior Partner of the firm of Messrs. Matheson, Ormsby and Prentice, 20 Upper Merrion Street, Dublin 2, was elected President on 13 December 1973 and will hold office until December 1974.

Mr. William Anthony Osborne of the firm of Messrs. Brown & McCann, Naas, Co. Kildare, was elected Senior Vice-President for the same period.

Mr. Bruce St. John Blake, B.A., LL.B., who practises at 93 Lower Baggot Street, Dublin 2, was elected Junior Vice-President for the same period.

Made with